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ill lill 4lrt8I Till I !,h'.i -I'll.' J il Itf-ft! t .'l m vp ;. ' T If Jl n ,.& il a, is i P ?' ! M ilk, ,-v i 1 p i " , '". fr-i, 1 ' i nil Mhl . JlM'1 'ivcjK'it ml , , M l r ii ih ' d. Jl 13 'Jl ! ' 'i i m flf r fl ri'j i o II Iks,!!! OTi PUBLISHED EVEBY THUKSDAY At Tlagttafl the county ceat of Coco nino county. CURRENT COMMENT. Cuba is said to have cost Spain In the last year more than the island is worth to her. Thk latest estimate of illiteratesover ten years of age in the United States is aii'-'i.TU-', or w. 3 per cent, ox ine whole population. A xumber of women in London re cently sent a communication to Lord Salisbury, the British premier, declar lag that war must cease. Fivk hundred land agents from the southern states are said to ho in the northwest to encourage a migration of farmers and mechanics to their section. The defeat of Senator Davis' presl' dentlal aspirations in Minnesota was attributed to the labor organizations, who were bitter against the senator on account of his radical stand against the Chicago railroad strike of two years ago. Pnor. Fassendeu, of tho Western university at Pittsburgh, Pa., who has been working in making develoqments with the new X rays, has invented a meter whereby they can be measured. The invention will assist greatly in studying the effect of the new dis covery. ' All the information coming from trustworthy sources represents the condition of the Armenians as most deplorable. Great numbers are dying of starvation and tho masses of the unfortunate people are subsisting on one-fourth of what is required to sus tain life. An appeal was recently made to the impropriations committee of the house by the Lincoln Memorial association for on appropriation with which to purchase tho house on Tenth street in Washington, in which Abraham Lincoln died, and to make it a per petual shrine of patriotic pilgrimage for the millions that venerate his Greater New York will have an nrea of 359 square miles, making it the largest American citv and nearly thrco times the size of Philadelphia. But London spreads over 088 square miles. The consolidation will advance New York to the position of tho world's second city, and as its rute of growth is nearly double that of London it should be the first before the end ol the coming century. Thomas Edison has succeeded, with the aid of the X rays, In penetrating the human body with the naked eye. He looked into the lunirs and heart and examined tho arteries, muscles and blood vessels of one of his assist ants. -With tho powerful cathode light behind the subject, ho looked through the screen of prepared chem icals, and is said to have plainly seen tho workings of tho various organs of tho body. An unpublished letter from Gen. Grant upon the Monroe doctrine was found a few days ago among the iec ords of tho war department. It was wiitten to President Andrew Johnson some time beforo the United States government demanded the withdrawal of French troo'ps from Mexico. Gen. Grant, as the letter shows, was in fa vor of extreme measures to overthrow Maximilian and to sustain the repub lican cause in Mexico. The government of New Zealand has drafted a bill for the exclusion of consumptives fnom that colony. It imposes nn extremely heavy penalty upon captains of ships bringing con sumptives to a port, whether knowing ly or unwittingly. The law, if passed, will compel the captains, as a matter of self-defense, to require all intend ing passengers from American, English or Asiatic ports to provide themselves with medical certificates showing that they are neither consumptives nor ex hibit any tendencies of being afflicted. The announcement that President Cleveland will soon extend the civil service rules so as to embraco all cler ical employes of the government is not supprislng, tho Indianapolis Jour nal says. At present nearly 00 per cent, of all such employes are under the rules, and it is but logical that the rest should bo placed on the same foot ing. Every president and head of de partment who has held office since the civil service law was passed has become a convert to its operation, and public opinion has Anally accepted it as a dis tinct improvement on tho old spoils system. . The senate committee on elections recently reported an amendment to the constitution for the election of senators by direct vote of the people, hut the prospects that the amendment will be made are small. In order to have it submitted to the people a two- thirds vote of the senate is required, the prospect lor which is rather irn probable. Should the senate decide to submit the question, it would be nec essary to have the amendment ratified by three-fourths of the states, cither by a vote of the legislature or by the voice of a convention called for the purpose. Cot. George W. Bain, of Kentucky, aaaresseu me women's unristiarr Tern perance union at Washington recently and made the statement that one ol tho causes of our reomt depression was the spending of 91,000,000,000 in 1604 by the American people for liquot and tobacco. "Do not say that out figures are exaggerated," he said, "until congress gives us a committee ol inquiry to prove that they are wrong. If the worklngmen of Chicago had saved the money they spent in one day for liquor during the Pullman istrike they could have bought thf Pullman plant" . t..,,., jm.BmmmM :tmmiiss3ismmnmr " aMMHearer ' .iimiiM ii r nTTra? tm ., NEWS OF THE WEEK. Gleaned By Telegraph and Mali PERSONAL AMD POLITICAL. At the republican convention at Austin, Tex., on the 36th policemen had to be called in to stop the riot be tween the McKinley men and the Keed men. One faction elected an Allison man and two Reed men to the conven tion at St Louis, and then after they had adjourned the McKinley forces took charge of the hall and elected a contesting delegation. The report of the death of President Ilippolyte, of Uayti, has been con firmed. A New York Sun special from In dianapolis, Ind., on the 25th stated that ex-President Harrison was being deluged with letters urging him to be a candidate for the presidential nomi nation and save his party from the nomination of McKinley, who repre sented the extreme idea in protection. Just before the republican state convention was called to order at Min neapolis, Minn., on the 24th it was an nounced that Senator Cushman K. Davis had wired to Congressman Taw ney withdrawing from the presiden tial race. The formal unveiling and transfer to New York city by tho Grant Monu ment association ol tne urant statue is set for April 25. Gen. Grant's grand son, Ulysses S. Grant, son of Col. Fred Grant, will unveil the statue. The junta on the 24th received news of the successful landing in Cuba of an expedition led by Draunce Pena. The party of 3S men was thought to be that c6nveyed to tho island by the steamer Commodore, which left the United States some time ago. The New York republican conven tion on the 24th indorsed Gov. Levi P. Morton for the presidency. The plat form declared for a protective tariff and reciprocity, opposed tho free coin age of ft'.lverand favored the gold standard. Dennis F. Murpiiv, since 1S43 one of the reporters of the United States sen ate, is dead. He was considered one of the best stenographers In the world. At the Massachusetts republican state convention at Boston on the 27th the boom of Speaker Reed for the nom ination for the presidency was launched amid great enthusiasm. The principal resolutions denounce the present tariff law and call for a new one for protec tion and reciprocity; denounce the sil ver agitation; oppose free silver coin age; oppose state banks and uphold national hanks; demand the restriction of immigration, the entire separation of church and state, the enforcement of the Monroe doctrine and express sympathy with Cuba. MISCELLANEOUS. By direction of tho officials of tho uniform rank, Knights of Pythias, the arrangements to hold the national en campment in Minneapolis have been declared off and Cleveland has been selected as tho place for the coming event The clearing house returns for the week ended March 27 for the following cities were: New York, 8502,250,584; Chicago, 877,303,703; St Louis, 820,532, 815; Kansas City, 89,119,410; St Joseph, 81,038,090; Topeka, 8447.207; Wichita, 8337,725; Omaha, 84,458,074. President Cleveland was to issue a proclamation on the 28th opening the Bed Lake Indian reservation in Minne sota to settlement The date selected is May 1. The White Earth reservation will be opened by a proclamation to be issued later. The two comprise about l.OCO.OOO ncres and form a portion of the old Chippewa lands. The women of north Texas have signed n petition to President Cleve land, Secretary Hoke Smith and .con gress, calling attention to the numer ous robberies and high crimes gener ally which have been committed by outlaws In the Indian territory on the citizens who live adjacent to the terri tory, and appealing for protection and relief from the outlaws, which, the petition says, can only bo done by the settlement of tho Indian territory by civilized people. Font st tires burned over n large ter ritory to tho east of Black River Falls, Wis., recently, doing damage to the extent of mauy thousands of dollars, They have destroyed the prospects of the bluoborry crop in the burned re gion, which has in the past furnished employment to hundreds of berry pickers. Six men in the freight yards of the Central railroad at Elizabeth, N. J., were run into by u train which was being shifted from one track to another on the J6th. An effort was made to stop the train, but a coupling pin broke and several cars slipped along the siding. Two of tho men were killed and one probably fatally wounded. The others were only slightly hurt Mrs. Ballinoton Booth lectured on the 2Gth at Pittsburgh, Pa., on "Slum and Shelter Work in Large Cities," to a large audience, and broke the silence ns to tho' cause of herself and the com mander breaking away from the old organization. She practically admitted that they had become too much Amer icanized to suit the ideas of the powers in London. A terrible explosion of fire damp has taken place in a mine at Brunner ton, in New" Zealand. Five persons were killed outright and 60 more were entombed, with no hope of being res cued. Mr. and Mrs. Snyder have died at Port Jarvls, N. Y., from being poisoned and the daughter, Mrs. Martha Whit taker, was under guard suspected of the crime. Little 11-year-old Elbert Henderson, of Jefferson ton, went into Louisville, Ky., on the 20th with a chain two feet long attached to his ankle. He was taken to a hardware store and tho ahain removed. He said that for two years his father hod had him chained to a lo;,'. Henderson will be prose cuted. Secretary of Agriculture Morton has ordered 10,000,000 packages of seeds to be distributed during April At least 400 of the 2,000 Italian im migrants who were landed on Ellis island, N. Y., a few days ago, will be deported, as they have no means to subsist upon for 30 days. The law re quires each immigrant to have at least 830 or to have some relative in Amer ica before he is admitted. At Benton, Ark., a recent fire de stroyed a dozen residences and nearly all the business part of town. Loss, 840,000. Matt Mootrt, a negro, was hanged at Georgetown, Tex., on the 27th in the presenco of 4,000 people for the murder of Andrew Pickrill,a Bohemian farmer, last May. Attended by two negro preachers, he sang a hymn and prayed, and then made a long talk, confessing his crime, but did not seem to think it justified hanging. The worst windstorm experienced in Denver, Col., In two years prevailed on the 27th, tho wind reaching a velocity of 63 miles an hour. The telegraph lines on all the railroads in the south ern part of the state were demoralized. At Cripple Creek the shaft house on tho Little Daisy mine blew down, kill ing John May and severely injuring John Hannon. The failures for the week ended March 27 (Dun's report) were 259 in tho United States, against 234 last vear, and 39 in Canada, against 43 last year. In several towns in the Indian terri tory small-pox was prevailing on the 27th in a malignant form and the peo ple were greatly excited. The places were rigidly quarantined and business was at a standstill. The badly decomposed body of an unknown man was found on the 20th in a trunk bought at an auction sale of unredeemed property at Chicago. A train on the Indiana, Illinois & Iowa railroad, loaded with grain and dressed beef, was wrecked near Tolo, Ind. The wrecking train, in cleaning up the track, found the dead bodies of four unknown men in a car of oats. They had evidently died from suffoca tion. Representative Crowther, of Mis souri, recently Introduced 37 petitions into congress from the G. A. It posts of Missouri, praying for the passage of a bill restoring all discontinued or re duced pensions. Inside of three hours over 5,000,000 feet of lumber was burned at two lum ber yards in La Crosse, Wis., recently, together with a bridge over the Black river. Loss, S200.000. Br order of the court and consent of counsel on both sides six men and six women coraposctUtho jury impaneled at Brookings. S. D., on tho 25th to hear the case of Phipps vs. Phlpps, a suit for divorce. The insurgent expedition which left New York recently on board the Ber muda for Cuba has safely landed all the men and munitions of war on the island, according to a Havana dispatch. In Sanctl bplritus province all of the archives of the insurgent government were captured by the Spanish troops. the Jirittsh bark Alexandria was towed to the Mud Flats at Sau Fran cisco and beached while In a burning condition. The stores were trans ferred to a tug. The dead bodies of three boys, aged 18, 15 and 11 ycars,named Boone Smith, Tom ShiQet and Charles McMillan, were found on the railroad track two miles south of Brownsboro, Tex., on tho 23d. Tho boys were supposed to have been killed by a train during the night. Tne boys had run away from home. Fifty thousand people were report ed suffering in Chicago on the 23d be cause of the strike in the clothing- manufacturing trade, and there was no prospect of any settlement of the trouble. ADDITIONAL dimpatciies. Coxrad Becker, a wealthy farraerof Arenzville, 111., was shot dead by his stepson, William Becker, the latter committing suicide by firing a bullet through his brain. The tragedy was the result of a family quarrel. hirer hundred Chineso were re cently blown to atoms by tho explosion of a magazine at the fort at Kiangy in China. The disaster was the work of mutinous soldiers, who were preparing to join secret society rebels in an at tack on an adjacent town. At a late hour on the 29th a masked man entered the farm house of Alvin M. Stone, near Talmadge, O., and com mitted a horrible butchery. When h e took his departure Stone and his wife. both aged people, were lying dead in bed and Ira Stillson, the hired man, and Emma Stone, the eldest of three daughters, were unconscious from blows dealt by the murderer. Hattie. with the blood streaming from wounds in her head, managed to reach a neigh bor's house. The crime was a mystery. The clerk of tho Oklahoma supreme conrt has received a telegram from Attorney-General Harmon tocalla Special session of that court for the purpose of Including what was known as Greer county, county, Tex., within the judi cial district of Oklahoma. Pulaski Duckworth, a prominent farmer near Bentonville, Ark., on the 29th killed his wife by strlkW her on the head with an ax. Ho then attacked his four-year-old child and Inflicted fatal injuries, after which ho cut his own throat, dying almost instantly. Duckworth was undoubtedly insane. J! RED UORRELL. n moldcr of Wfist. Cn. lumbus, O., aged 21, shot his wffe, who was but 17, and then stood before a mirror and cut his throat with a razor. l lie wife will recover. Jealonsv was the causo of the affair. Two warehouses of the Pleasure Uidge Park Distillery Co., at Louis ville, Ky., were destroyed by fire re cently with all their contents, consist ing of upwards of 30.000 barrels of whisky. The total loss was about 8425,000. Melvin O. Dennis, of Denver. r.n.. rode a mile unpaced on the Mont Clair straightaway course in the phenomenal time of 1:11 3-5. It was the fastest. Hm ever made on a wheel. The wind was at his hack, blowing at the rate of near ly GO miles an hour. The provisional national iTinntii committee of the new national reform party has issued a call for the national convention, to be held in Pittsburgh. Pa., Mny 25. A FIENDISH CRIME. A Masked Man Attempts to Butch er a Family. A TRIPLE TRAGEDY' IN ARKANSAS. A Farmer Murder Ilia Wife and Child and Tben Commit- Hnlclde A Family flaarrel A Wife Murdered Through Jealousy. Akbon, O., March 3a At a late hour last night a masked man entered the farm house of Alvin M. Stone, near Talmadge, a few miles from this city, and in a brief space of half an hour committed a horrible, butchery. When be took his departure Stone and his wife, both aged people, were lying dead in bed, horribly mutilated, and Ira Stillson, the hired roan, and Emma Stone, the eldest of the three daugh ters.were unconscious from blows dealt by tho murderer. Hattie, with the blood streaming from the wounds in her head, managed to reach a neigh bor's house, told her story and then fainted. After she had been put to bed, the neighbor, calling for help, went to the Stone house. There the evidences of the butchery were discov ered. The only person in the house who was able to speak was Flora Stone, aged 16, and she was badly frightened. For this reason nil she could tell was that the man who com mitted the crime wore a mask over his face. The crime is a mystery. There is no possible motive for the murders so far as can be learned. Certainly the mur derer was not bent on robbery, for in a bureau drawer in Mr. Stone's room were two gold watches and some money, and nothing had been taken. The sheriff of Summit county was called to the scene of the murder early in the morning, and with a posse of men he has been searching all day for clews to the murder. Ira Stillson and Emma and Hattie Stone have not yet recovered consciousness and it is feared Stillson at least will die, while the chances for the recovery of the two girls are very small. A TRIPLE TRAGEDY IN ARKANSAS. Bentonville, Ark., March 30. A triple tragedy occurred three miles from here yesterday. Pulaski Duck worth, a prominent and highly respect ed farmer, killed his wife by striking her on the head with an ax, the un fortunate woman dying instantly. Ho then attacked his four-year-old child with the ax and inflicted fatal injuries. The man then threw himself across the bed, drew a pocket-knife and slashed his throat, dying almost instantly. A seven-year-old daughter escaped slaughter by being at Sabbath school. Duckworth was undoubtedly insane. A FAMILY QUARREL. Virginia, 111., March 30. Conrad Becker, a wealthy farmer of Arenz ville, this county, was shot dead by his stepson, William Becker, tho latter committing suicide by firing a bullet through his brain. The terrible trag edy is the result of an old family quar rel which recently terminated in a lawsuit and the ordering of the step son off of some land. The murdered man leaves an estate of 880,000. The murderer and suicide carried a life in surance)! 820,000 in different fraternal orders. A WIFE MURDERED THROUGH JEALOUSY. Columhus, O., March 30. Fred Gor rell, a molder of West Columbus, aged 21, yesterday afternoon shot his wife, who is but 17, nnd then stood before a mirror nnd cut his throat with a razor. Gorrell died almost instantly, but his wife will recover. Jealousy was the cause of the affair. A MOB IN CONTROL. Negroes Not Allowed In a Louisiana Tarlsh Four Men Killed. New Orleans, March 3a Special dispatches report that 300 armed men held possession of the town of Palmet to, St Landro parish, Saturday. Their presence was to prevent the negrpes from registering. Register Swords ad vertised that he would open the regis tration office there Saturday. He kept it open ail day, but not one negro reg istered. They were thoroughlv over awed by the presence of the armed men. A mob attacked the house of a colored man, who retaliated by firing. utuer suois were nrea ana lour ne groes were killed. GREER COUNTY TROUBLE. A Special Snlsloo of the Oklahoma Supreme unnri 111 nettle tne Matter. Guthrie, Ok., March SO. Tho clerk ot the Oklahoma supreme court has re ceived a telegram from Attorney-General Harmon to call a special session of that court for the purpose of includ ing what is known as Greer county, Tex., within the judicial district of Ok lahoma. This is pursuant to the de cision of the United States supreme coure of some days ago and means the addition of 20,000 people to Oklahoma and 1,100,000 acres of land. Sheriff Stands a Mob Off. Crown Point, Ind., March 30. Forty masked men, armed with clubs and shotguns, marched to the jail hero last night with the expressed determina tion of lynching Albert Knaus, who at tempted to murder Mrs. Nicholas Hoan. Sheriff Hays was prepared for them and his threatening baffled the mob. Deputies are still, however, on trnarA uk mo jau. excitement is intense. Rnssla Is in Lino With Fnn... St. Petersburg, March 30. The Rus sian newspapers aro unanimous in op posing England's claim to employ the '"" ' U1 l" Egyptian debt to pay l.nn nyivnRAii nf tl,a c..j. .... J ri.ii i r .. ""uuau expedition. This is necessarily an accurate reflec tion of the views of tho government whose undertaking with Fran ii parts of the Egyptian question is most The secretary of the interior will immediately arrange an allotment in severalty of the Pawpaw Indian lands and the sale of the remaining portion of their reservation for the benefit of the Indians REVIEW OF TRADE. No Important Chance Ha Occurred In th Condition of Business for the Past Week. New York, March 28. K. G. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says:. No Important change has occurred in the general condition of business during- tho week and if trade in some respects looks worse, in other respects it looks better. Some failures of magnitude have occurred, which have caused much apprehension and unwilling ness to lend among bankers and there have been somewhat less favorable features In the dry goods market, but In iron and steel conditions are slightly im proved and in boots and shoes considerably more hopeful. The labor controversies, main ly lfi the clothlnn trade, still cause much In terruption of that business. Foreign trade is a little more satisfactory, exports from New York for three weeks showing nn increase over last year of six per cent., while imports have shown nearly the same rate of decrease, and there arc not wanting signs that the domestic markets haro been somewhat overloaded with many kinds of foreign goods. In general the course of domestic prices tends to favor the marketing of staples abroad. Wheat has gained about a point, but corn nnd cotton remain unchanged. Receipts ol wheat at western ports continue surprisingly large for a most unfavorable season and make It hard to believe that the crop of 169 J was as small as estimates represent It. Cotton had a lively rise with tho covering of short sellers, but began to decline again a week ago and has been lagging ever since. In the dry goods market the latest Indica tions do not warrant expectations that the mills will continue production throughout the season. The demand for dress goods is the best feature of the woolen market, and there Is about r.s much difficulty as ever in men's wear departments, the operations of clothiers being hindered, notonly bv prevalent strikes, but by slackness of Immediate demand. A heuvy failure In Texas will also swell the aggregate of returns for the past week, which Includes 259 In the United States, against .iSI last year, and 39 In Canada, against ii last year. SCORED BY ROSEBERY. Lord BalUbury indicated Without Mercy by the Liberal Leader. London, March 2S. The earl of Rose bcry, leader of the liberal party, made an important speech before the Na tional Liberal federation, charging the government with a deplorable want of continuity in the foreign policy. He pointed out that within six months they had been on the verge of war with the United States, and then with Germany, and now they were embarking on a war against no particular enemy. He passed over the black and bloody page of Armenia, he said, which Englishmen would all look back to with shame and remorse. Lord Salisbury, up to the end of December, had displayed lean ings to the dreibund. By the begin ning of January his continuous policy had landed Great Britain in the arms of France, whose affections it was in tended to gain by the monstrous Slam convention. That state has lasted about six weeks, and then Lord Salis bury embarked in a march to the Sou dan, which outrages France and throws Great Britain back into the arms of the Dreibund. Lord Rosebery proceeded in detail to very strongly criticise the Nile expedition.' GROWTH OF TEMPERANCE. The Decrease In I.lqnor Consumption tho Laat IS lean Very Markrd Washington, March 28. Here are some figures showing the progress of this country as a drinking nation. In 1887 the average annual consumption of malt liquors in the United States was 5. SI gallons per capita of popula tion. It gradually increased every year until it reached the- "high liquor" mark, if that term is permissible in this connection, in 1S93, when there were 16.08 gallons consumed'for every man, woman and child in the nation. Then it receded a trifle, being for 1805 only 14.95 gallons. The consumption of whisky and other distilled liquors lias, on tho contrary, decreased, hav ing fallen from 1.G9 gallons for every inhabitant in 1809 to 1.2 in 1895. The red-letter year for the rum power was 1870, when it rose to 2.07 gallons. The decrease in the last 15 years is a start ling evidence of the steady growth of the temperate sentiment of this eoun try. WILL BE DEPORTED. Destltuto Italians Recently Landed In New York Win n gant Hack. New York, March 28. At least 400 of the 2,000 Italian immigrants who were landed on Ellis island Sunday and Monday will "oe deported, as they have no means to subsist upon for 30 days. The law requires each immi grant to have at least 830 or to have some relative in America before he is admitted. Commissioner Senner at tributes the large immigration of Italians to the Italian invasion of Abyssinia, to which most Italian peas ants are averse. They do not wish to bo drafted into tho army and so, to avoid becoming conscripts, they emi grate. In many instances they have sold their household effects In order to raise their passage money. Of the vast number of Italian immigrants now on Ellis Island, but a very small propor tion are ticketed through to railroad towns. l'ythlani Will Meet at Cleveland. iNDlANAroLIs, Ind., March 28. By, uirecuon oi ino omclals of the uniform rank, Knights of Pythias, the arrange ments to hold the national encamp ment in Minneapolis have been de clared off and Cleveland has been se lected as the place for tho coming event This action was decided upon at a conference held between Supreme Chancellor Walter B. Ritchie, of Lima, 0.,and Maj.-Gen. James RXarnahan, of this city, and the reason for so doing wns the alleged discrimination bv the Western Passenger association in favor or tbenatlonal G. A. R. encampment and against the uniform rank. Fight with Cattle Thieves. Fort Worth, Tex., March 28. News reached here yesterday morning of a desperate fight between cattle thieves and cowmen near Frevlis lake, Lynn county, in which two thieves were killed and two wounded. One cowman was wounded, but not seriously. The Deadly Railroad Crossing. Sakduskv, O., March 28. Mrs. John F. Siegel and her son,' aged 19 years, of Bogart's Corners, were struck by a passenger train while driving across the Lake Shore railroad tracks in this city yesterday. Mrs. Siegel was killed, and her son will die. - ovwacv ut uiaimenu fni ... Contain Mercury, t as mercury will surely destroy th. smell and completely dcraneotlie w?500' torn when entering it ttrough KesJ surfaces. Such articles should lS?J used except on prescriptions from ? pnysicians, as tne damago thcvVi i" ion fold to tho good jou can L'Ldo h rive from them. Hall's Catarrh W'Jk ufacturedby F. J. Cheney & ;C u., contains no mercury, and l t.i " ternally, acting directly upon ftho 'r&" mucous Burf aces of Din . .Dl0p4 m Ilnll'a Pntjirrh ("urn uj '"'' I Sold by Druggists, price 7.V irv..i .Hall's Family Pills iro tho belt tUe- best. "Yes," said tho cornfed p!iiwfi,. , is notsb difficult to get sometninTte". Ing, but when onegets It It Isoot wonK price." Indianapolis Journal. mutte. Saved from Destruction. This is what happens when tho Vu. are rescued from Inactivity bvlLt ,f Stomach Bitters. It thev contLUer't they are threatened wit? Brighfe diabetes or some other maladyVhMT their destruction. MaU'Bi' rheumatic ailment and dsncns ia,Dd conquered by thoBitters, wnicn hthl1 and effective. ' cn " thoiw?k A torpid liver has f rcqueitlv succeed In convincing man that he Is fairlvrwi? with statesmanship and indcnending Washington Post. u-inicn( Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline' iv. Nerve Restorer. So nU af terflm davfe Marvelous cures. Trcatfee and fi tr ,i i- tie free. Dr. Kline, 031 Arch St., jffi.- TnE Imagination has a shadow as well.. the body, that keeps Just a little aheadcf you, or lollovvs close behind j our htT.w don't do to let it frighten j ou-Ualfti1 Mothers Anxiously watch declining health of their daughters. So many are cut off by consumption in early years that there is real cause for anxiety. ia the early stages, when not beyond the reach of medicine, Hood's SarsapinlU will restore the quality and quantity of the blood and thus give good health. Read the following letter : "It is. but Just to write about bt ""." vyuitt, ugeu i. one was com. pletclyiundown, declining, had thatUrei feeling, and friends said sho would not livo over three months. Sho had a lad Cough and nothing seemed to doheranygood. I happened to read about Hood's SarsaparEj andh.idhcrgivoltatrl.il. From theveiy first doso she began to get better. After talcing a few bottles she was complete'; cured and her health has been the best ettr since." Mas. Adoie Peck, U Railroid Place, Amsterdam N. Y. " I will say that my mother has not stated my case in as strong words as I would hare done. Hood's Sarsapanlla has truly cured mo and I am now wclL" Coui Pics, Amsterdam, N. Y. Be sure to get Hood's, because ood's Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifier Alldruygists.il. Prepared only by CL I. Hood L Co , Lowell, Mai Hnnfl'c. Pillc are Prclv vefretaM,n- take the law in your own hands, ladies, when you ask for ft RtO' .-rt Bias Velveteen Skirt Binding and don't get it. Sentence such a store to the loss of your trade and give it to merchants who are will ing to sell what you demand. Look for S. H. & M.," on tkelM and take no other. If your dealer will not supply you we will. Send for simples, showing labels irdniW to the S. H. & M. Co.. P. 0. Box 699. Nev York C DIRECTIONS for tudiy CREAM BALU. AppJv a particle of the Balm til rcctly into Uu nostrils. Af ter a moment draw strong breath through the nose, Vte Uirte times a day, after meals preferi ed, and before reUrintj. CATARRH, ELY'S CREAM BAMI Open" " J!SSItIU NkmI PiU.nce. Allayn Pain " ?'? mM Heals the Son-s.Protertu th Membrane rrnm Kcstores the bensen of Ta'te and S' i li quickly absorbed and eItm relief ' onre A particle l.applled Into e'fH""!?! msll''"'! able" Price V renta a t )rulf t ot bj m Tolfc JS1.Y UKUillt.ltS.MJ woricuc..- phy of the brilliant advocaja 'rgJJdepl frf SJtl-rldent. Fin. ji l"; Set !;' acripiiont pxciubito '"""i.TiMtlif Puu" . Mil li moncr. or terms, etc , da "".Yrnu.w Will L hiultox run. ui.i - bavfe- genuino. It Is taken Internalh- ,Fut hi Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Chenev& r. timonials f l ee. ey " Co- Tes- TTTlA-B BfcXMBM l '"'WJ aBrS3 Lai-Co. rr-"g J KMT .iMr. to 4 "j7J5 McKINLEYHHit